thewastedwalrus |
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Avoron wrote:What's so ironic about that? You could have a member of the Dawnflower Cult be a necromancer, as far as I can tell. Necromancy is just a school of magic like any other, it can be used for whatever purpose its wielder desires.They're fanatically against the creation of undead.
Eh, the necromancy school deals with spells that both create and destroy undead. A low level example would be disrupt undead.
Xuldarinar |
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Nothing wrong with a member of the Dawnflower Cult being a Necromancer. A wizard (or other spellcaster) who studies necromancy, believing understanding to be a crucial tool in combatting something. They never raise undead, or use any of the (Evil) necromancy spells, but theres plenty of other tools available to necromancy.
Power over Undead can provide Turn Undead, or one could take the Life focused school and have Healing Grace. +1 damage per spell level, advancing to +2 and +3? That would be useful for an undead slaying wizard.
Avoron |
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A life subschool Cult of the Dawnflower necromancer actually sounds like a really cool concept. There are plenty of necromancy spells that could be very useful for combating or eliminating undead.
0 - disrupt undead
1 - chill touch, decompose corpse
2 - calm spirit, command undead
3 - halt undead, necromantic burden
4 - death ward, rest eternal, undeath inversion
5 - possession trap, spawn ward
6 - undeath to death
7 - control undead
You could be lawful good, take Deific Obedience (Sarenrae), variant multiclass with paladin, and go into the Soul Warden and Evangelist prestige classes.
Ironic enough for you yet?
Cevah |
Try to have inquisitor with witch hunter archetype. While having team full of a witch.
Again. Nobody expect a....
Grim and determined, the inquisitor roots out enemies of the faith, using trickery and guile when righteousness and purity is not enough. Although inquisitors are dedicated to a deity, they are above many of the normal rules and conventions of the church. They answer to their deity and their own sense of justice alone, and are willing to take extreme measures to meet their goals.
When pursuing justice for their faith, inquisitors sometimes hunt sorcerers, witches, wizards, and other practitioners of arcane magic—but especially witches, since their devotion to a patron is often seen as suspect by many religions.
Is the witch or the witch's patron an enemy of the faith?
If not, there need not be a problem.
/cevah